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# [SCI] Turbulence Theory ⏎ **Turbulence Theory** is the study of chaotic, eddying fluid motion that occurs above a critical Reynolds number, characterised by Kolmogorov's scaling laws (1941) and still not fully solved. ⏎ ## Overview ⏎ Osborne Reynolds (1883) showed that flow transitions from laminar to turbulent at a critical ratio of inertial to viscous forces (the Reynolds number Re = ρuL/μ). G. I. Taylor developed statistical descriptions of turbulence (1935). Andrei Kolmogorov (1941) proposed the energy cascade: energy injected at large scales cascades to smaller and smaller eddies until it is dissipated by viscosity, with the spectrum E(k) ∝ k^(−5/3) — one of the most celebrated results in theoretical physics. ⏎ Despite Kolmogorov's breakthrough, turbulence remains unsolved in the sense that no general solution to the Navier–Stokes equations exists (Millennium Prize Problem). It is relevant to weather prediction, jet engine design, ocean circulation, and astrophysics. ⏎ ## Key Figures & Recognition ⏎ - **Osborne Reynolds** (1842–1912): Reynolds number, Reynolds-averaged equations. - **G. I. Taylor** (1886–1975): Statistical theory of turbulence. - **Andrei Kolmogorov** (1903–1987): Kolmogorov scaling laws, 1941. Wolf Prize 1980. No Nobel. ⏎ ## Seminal Papers ⏎ - Reynolds, O. "An experimental investigation of the circumstances which determine whether the motion of water shall be direct or sinuous." *Phil. Trans. R. Soc.* 174 (1883). - Kolmogorov, A.N. "The local structure of turbulence in incompressible viscous fluid." *Dokl. Akad. Nauk SSSR* 30 (1941). ⏎ # Parents ⏎ * [SCI] Aerodynamics⏎
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